The last days of Boris Johnson
As a disgraced prime minister fights for survival,
what does it mean for the Conservative Party – and for Britain?
By Andrew
Marr
Photo by
Chris Floyd
For once,
the message from the Downing Street machine was frank, accurate and crystal
clear: “It’s over.” The double resignation of Sajid Javid, the health
secretary, and Rishi Sunak, the chancellor, smashes the dam. It marks the end
of Boris Johnson’s overlordship of Britain. The water is gushing through. The
cracks gape in every direction. It cannot be rebuilt.
This
doesn’t mean that the end for Johnson will come quickly. It certainly won’t
come neatly. It would be in the national interest for him now to leave No 10 by
the front door, announce his resignation and offer, in a spirit of generosity
and humility, his help as the Tory party struggles in short order to find a new
leader.
We may
sneer and despise politicians. We may hate them. But the country needs
governance and an effective government. Somebody must be chancellor of the
exchequer. Somebody must run the NHS. Step forward, Nadhim Zahawi and Steve
Barclay respectively. But the sad truth is that Johnson’s last gift to his
party is likely to be a chaotic transition rather than a smooth one. Certainly,
at the time of writing and as his cabinet started to come apart, he seemed
determined to hang on. Loyalists were begged not to desert him. One by one the
junior ministers fled. Tory party office holders resigned on live television.
But still a zombie cabinet struggled on.
The
question is, to what end? After a day spent in the Westminster coffee bars and
corridors, it was clear to me on 5 July that this time Conservative
backbenchers had had it up to the back teeth. I have never heard such anger –
not against Tony Blair in the aftermath of the Iraq War, not against Margaret
Thatcher as she was falling. No 10’s lies over the promotion of Christopher
Pincher after allegations of sexual misconduct were made against him – exposed
in a stinging public letter by the former head of the Foreign Office, Simon
McDonald, one of the most respected public servants in Britain – genuinely
revolted MPs who had up to then reluctantly stuck with the Prime Minister.
“This is
worse than partygate,” was a phrase I heard half a dozen times from different
people in the hours before the resignations of Sunak and Javid. Those plotting
to take over the 1922 Committee, which comprises all Tory MPs except for
ministers, think that up to half the entire parliamentary party – as many as
180 MPs – might be persuaded to send in letters demanding Johnson’s
resignation.

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